I am Done With Internet Bids

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by Randy Abercrombie, Jun 7, 2026 at 2:21 PM.

  1. rte

    rte Well-Known Member

    Floor bidder may get preferred treatment on bidding, not saying that's the way I would run an auction business.
     
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  3. Dafydd

    Dafydd Supporter! Supporter

    That's what I thought had happened but clearly this was not the case with Randy, sadly nothing surprised me any more with auction houses.
     
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  4. johnmilton

    johnmilton Well-Known Member

    One bidding strategy is to look at the bidding increments and plan accordingly. If the increments really are $50 when the bid level is $150, I would not even bother with the auction. The increment at that level should be in the $10 neighborhood.

    Still if you buck it up to series money, like $2,000, the increments might be $100. A strategy can be to look where the increment is $250 and bid at that point. It makes it more expensive for someone to outbid you.
     
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  5. The Meat man

    The Meat man Supporter! Supporter

    It's not about preferred treatment. It's basically just a way to run auctions without prebids. The max "bid" you send to the AH is really just you authorizing them to bid up to this point for you during the live auction. If the increments are so ordered that your bid doesn't end up on your max bid, it goes to the other bidder. There is nothing nefarious about it, nor any preferential treatment going on.
    If you are really wanting the lot, the strategy would be to bid an increment over just in case you don't happen to top the other bidder before the bidding hits your max.
     
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  6. The Meat man

    The Meat man Supporter! Supporter

    Yeah I just used those increments to make the illustration easier. That would be way too big on a real auction.
     
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  7. mark_h

    mark_h Somewhere over the rainbow

    I would probably skip using this auction house, but it does sound like what was mentioned where they favor the onsite bidder for whatever reason.
     
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  8. mlov43

    mlov43 주화 수집가

    If an auction is a coin that I think I'll NEVER see again, then I'll probably bid way over 2X what it's worth, if I have the money; and I'll submit the bid in the last 4 seconds. That's about the only way to win. Even then, there's no guarantees.

    Only rarely do auctions for popular coins 1) result in a win for me, and 2) result in a reasonable price.

    Otherwise, I will just try to find it at a coin show or online retailer.
     
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  9. rte

    rte Well-Known Member

    Makes sense if that's the way the auction house runs.
    Would be better to bid $300.01 in those cases.:p
     
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  10. rte

    rte Well-Known Member

    I suppose in this case, might be worth reading the fine print :p
    I usually throw a little bit more on my bids...
    $300.01 for the people who stick with basic bidding.
    And Then $301.01 type bids for those other people who like their $.99 end bids.:p
     
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